Beauty Way



A thick layer of composted manure hides the cardboard. Grass and chickweed yellow and wilt against crumbly dirt underneath. There is death and decomposition and the nourishment of the soil, but it takes time.

After a week we plant squash by shoveling through soggy cardboard and into the hardpan. A dusting of fish meal fertilizer and a handful more compost, a tucking in of roots, a blessing on leaves. Months from now (if all goes well) there will be butternuts and delicata and sweet pie pumpkins swelling in girth and stretching vines to far corners of the garden where the mint grows in clumps and the snakes lie still in the sun. The popcorn seeds will have outgrown their hulls, grown into the sky with dark tassels waving, waiting for specks of life to brush against silk and crawl into the belly of kerneled possibility.

Changed, all of it.

We nourish the soil for our own purpose, for this food that is growing that will fill our bellies in the winter. We nourish the soil around these little islands of seeds and stalks so that the ground will repair itself with microbes and worms. We nourish the soil to nourish the soil. I may not be here to reap the benefits of the latter. I may have moved house or leapt into the stars. It doesn’t matter. In this moment, with these hands, I am creating beauty and healing in this place.

When I first moved in it was difficult for me to look past the chipped paint and cracks in the wall and overgrown weeds in the garden. Why should we fix up land and a house when we are not sure we are going to stay? I stared at the crabgrass in the flowerbeds and the piles of dead blackberry branches and gnarled pear trees and felt hopeless and resentful. Why should I fix up someone else's house, why should they benefit off of my hard work? Why didn’t they do it to begin with? Why can’t it be exactly how I want it to be!
I was startled by the ferocity of my reaction. Where was this anger and resentment coming from? Aren't most of our waking hours spent doing things that benefit other people? What happened to the young girl in the family kitchen who only wanted to help for the sake of helping?

Out into the garden, out into the world is what needs to happen when that anger arises. I picked up pieces of plastic twine and bottles, chip bags and wire as I went along up onto the hill and deeper into the jungle of Scot’s Broom, entangled in my thoughts. Tiny purple flowers led me to a clearing underneath a pine where deer dream and squirrels chirp. Each step is connected with the past and future ones and they overlap with all the other beings that have stepped and slithered and floated onto this earth before. We are layers of being. Layers of beauty and destruction and care.We can leave the trash on the ground or pick it up to reveal the growth below.

It hit me.
Beauty Way. The concept seems simple: leave a place more beautiful than you found it.
It is that simple to do. It can be sweeping a floor or placing a rose in a vase. It can be leaving a piece of art by a trail or filling a bowl with water for the birds or changing a roll of toilet paper before it totally runs out. Beauty Way can also be amending the soil and planting and tending even when there is no plan for the future. The ‘why-should-I-bother’ sentiment disappears and an attitude of service fills in the void the more it is practiced. Why not make a room, a garden, a patch of land, a community more beautiful than how one found it just for the sake of beauty?
Why not give without asking to receive?

I’d like to think I’ve been doing Beauty Way all my life but...yeah right. On the scale of generous verses transactional I do believe my scale tipped towards the latter. That is how we often survive. And then, in a very short time, I was shown another way to live. I don’t think I was fully conscious of the magic and complexity of Beauty Way until staying at The Ojai Foundation where I learned how to be of service joyfully instead of with a sense of obligation or direct (or indirect) personal benefit. The transition was steep and I spent more than a couple weeks checking my watch to see when my three hours of “Beauty Way” chores were done each day. And then they ceased to be chores. And then I stopped checking my watch and instead started watching the birds play in freshly drawn water and felt the intense energy of the Beauty Way-ed land. I realized that sitting in Council circle with others, listening for the sake of listening, that was a form of Beauty Way, too.

It clicked that I was fully capable of choosing to live the Beauty Way instead of a life of begrudging obligation. I still forget this when the bills are due and 18-hour work days leave me exhausted or the weeds in the garden grow faster than the peas or I get pissed off for having to clean up somebody's mess. If I can breathe and switch gears, refocus on giving freely instead of conditionally, I am able to live in this beauty. It doesn’t always work, that’s for sure, but when it does I am filled with a gratitude that seems almost silly while washing dishes. And it is fun! Finding ways to nourish the land or a relationship with little notes and sweet gestures makes me realize that this life is a game. It is a choice to see that game as warlike or joyful.

Dishes for Beauty. Toilet Paper for Beauty. Squash and Cardboard and Manure for Beauty.

Life is beauty if we can just nourish the seed of playful generosity within us.

Eat the Truth



It makes me anxious. Terrified really. I don’t want this to happen. I want to shield them from this reality. I want to pluck out the evidence at its source. They may be the last to know even when WE ALL KNOW. We are OK with it. Sort of. We just skirt around the issue as we chew and smile.

But They may not be OK with it. They may not want to skirt anything of the sort.

They will be excited for the day the box arrives. They will come to town with high expectations, a rumbling belly, a head full of dreams of creation and nourishment.

Fwap. Fwap. Plastic arms open into theirs. They gently expose the contents of the mysterious black box they've been waiting for all week. They pull at curly leafed lettuce and poke at the smoothly wrapped gift of cabbage. They lift up the kale to find adorable peppers and a rainbow of chard. They pop a leaf of basil into their mouth unable to resist the memories of warm summer pesto evenings. They pick out their striped tomatoes and peach-colored watermelons. They pile everything into a bag or box and say hello to all of us harvesters sitting at a table eating lunch as they make their way back to their car.

My anxiety grows. I want to warn them. But I also know that this is an important life lesson. That they need to know the facts and I can’t be the one to halt that process. I can’t be the one to pretend like it didn’t happen.

They will get home and plan out dinner. Corn will be on the menu. They will wash the lettuce for salad, chop up the eggplant to fry in olive oil, slice the tomatoes for garnish. Then comes the moment when they peel back the husks and silk and find it gorging on their dinner. Their dinner! Excrement and sloppy chewing filling the space around emptied kernels with a wriggling monstrous worm sloshing away in his own doings.

They will drop the corn and scream. They will throw the corn out the window straight into the compost pile. They will root through the rest of their box looking for wrigglers. They will never buy organic corn (or anything else from the ground) again. EVER. The farm will go out of business.

Pause. Rewind.
These are sensible, CSA, farm loving folks. They know that worms are a sign that the corn is not sprayed with pesticides, not GMO, not dripping with toxins. They know that sharing with the bugs happens, that this sweet corn is delicious to a variety of creatures.

And perhaps they want to know the truth:
Corn comes from outside!
Corn grows up from the dirt!
Corn and all the other organic vegetables inevitably have creatures crawling on them at one point or another whether you see them or not. And sometimes that one point is when they go into the boxes and go home with you.

So why the anxiety? Because I have seen those who won’t touch dirty tomatoes and shrink away from twisted carrots. I have washed my fair share of produce going into CSA boxes to ease folks into the ‘veggies come from dirt’ discovery. But I know the time is now for the link to be solidified between soil and nourishment, that there are so many who are ready for the mental hurdle that bugs on food can present. And we are helping them on that journey.

I start to have faith that these folks will still eat that corn. That they will embrace the worm (or feed him to the chickens) and devour the sweet juicy niblets. That they will appreciate the reminder that all life needs nourishment and who (or what) can resist fresh September corn on the cob? 

I look down onto my plate full of salad from the farm. 
There is a tiny green worm inching towards the edge. 
I smile and let him crawl, the worry dripping away like butter off a cob. I am no longer anxious about the effect the worm in the corn will have. I realize I am actually part of the effect, a source of positive change in this society, thanks to this farmer’s honesty. 

I welcome another creature to our table and keep on eating.